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June, 2010

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Remembering First Grade

BHS partnered with the Brooklyn School of Inquiry (BSI), a citywide gifted and talented school located in Bensonhurst, to conduct oral history interviews with all of the students in the school’s first First Grade class.  Although these narrators are only 6 or 7 years old, their interviews add much to BHS’s Oral History collection, documenting important things about life in Brooklyn in 2010, including details that can only be captured by youthful candor.  Students will receive copies of their interviews when they graduate from 8th Grade in 2017.

Check out this video from BSI’s series A School Grows in Brooklyn:

How fun is this?

Illustration by Sarah Lippett

Own This City, Time Out New York, June 24-30, 2010

Check out this awesome illustration of the Brooklyn Historical Society by Sarah Lippett in this week’s issue of Time Out New York!  Our exhibit Home Base: Memories of the Brooklyn Dodgers and Ebbets Field is featured among other great New  York Water Taxi destinations.  Click here to see the full image.

How the Architectural Walking Tour Built the Preservation Movement

Luna Park, Coney Island ca 1910; LOC Flickr The Commons

Luna Park, Coney Island ca 1910; LOC Flickr The Commons

Learn how walking tours helped pave the way for the Landmarks Law of 1965.

Historian and journalist Francis Morrone, author of The Architectural Guidebook to Brooklyn, discusses the history of the walking tour. Learn how the first walking tours in the 1950s sponsored by The Municipal Art Society, the Museum of the City of New York, and the Brooklyn Heights Association made the public aware of the city’s historic architecture.

Mr. Morrone discusses the European background of the New York walking tour, the pioneering uses of walking tours by architectural historians such as Henry Hope Reed, Clay Lancaster and Margot Gayle, and Morrone’s own experiences as a leader of some 1,500 walking tours.

Listen here:

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also available on iTunes: Subscribe to BHS’s Free Podcast!

Brooklyn Beatmakers

BK-BeatmakersThe Brooklyn Historical Society is proud to announce Brooklyn Beatmakers, a showcase with headliner The New School Sun Ra Arkestra, led by 22-year Sun Ra arkestra musician, master jazz trumpeter, and music director of Sistas’ Place, Ahmed Abdullah!

Joining the Arkestraʼs “21st century, interplanetary sound and philosophy” made famous by the legendary composer-bandleader Sun Ra, will be emerging songwriter and emcee Imani Kairee, the dub diva Honeychild Coleman, and the Bushwick teen hip-hop collective Nine 11 Thesaurus.

The New School Sun Ra Arkestra “represent[s] a milestone in the legacy of Sun Ra,” says Mr. Abdullah. “Given the opportunity to study both the music and philosophy of Sun Ra, the New School students have created their own unique ensemble sound…their performance will astound you.”

The BHS oral history team will be on hand to gather audience membersʼ and artistsʼ Brooklyn stories, and invite anyone to come and record their own personal Brooklyn stories, reflections, thoughts, or questions. The documented afternoon will be used for the BHS iTunes podcast available at www.brooklynhistory.org, and added to the BHS oral history archives.

Produced in partnership with Brooklyn-based Horse+Dragon NYC, the BHS Brooklyn Beatmakers showcase is a celebration of local style and sound, and a part of the 2010 Make Music New York festival, a live, free musical event across the city that takes place the first official day of summer each June 21.

Brooklyn Historical Society “Brooklyn Beatmakers”
Monday, June 21, 12-3 pm
128 Pierrepont Street (at Clinton Street)
Brooklyn, New York 11201
More information and lineup at www.horsedragon-nyc.com
Honeychild Coleman

Crown Heights Oral History Exhibit

Eunice Oden and Treverlyn DeHaarte

Eunice Oden & Treverlyn DeHaarte; courtesy of Listen to This

There are two streams of collecting oral history: the private reflections of public figures (see The Clinton Tapes by Taylor Branch), and the memories and experiences of regular folks whose stories are passed on through family and friends but who often don’t see their lives reflected in history books.

Before anything was written, community history was passed down through the generations with stories, poems, and songs (see the griot tradition in West Africa).  In our ever-globalizing world, we don’t always grow up in the same place as our parents, grandparents, and ancestors, and we don’t always have the opportunity to hear the stories of our elders.  And that’s why community oral history projects like Listen to This: Crown Heights Oral History Project directed by Alex Kelly and sponsored by Crow Hill Community Association, NYC Grassroots Media Coalition, and Super Wings NY, are so vital.

The interview crew

The interview crew; courtesy of Listen to This

Five students from Paul Robeson High School interviewed over 45 people who have lived in Crown Heights for over 15 years and the resulting collection of stories are available for listening in an exhibit at LaunchPad (721 Franklin Ave between Park and Sterling).   Copies of the interviews are also available for listening in several archives in Brooklyn including Paul Robeson High School, Medgar Evers College, Crown Heights Community Mediation Center, Brooklyn Public Library – Eastern Parkway, Weeksville Heritage Center, and more (including BHS soon).

Listen to This exhibit at LaunchPad

Listen to This exhibit at LaunchPad

Community Celebration at LaunchPad

Community Celebration at LaunchPad

The community celebration and exhibition opening at LaunchPad yesterday was a wonderful event.  The room was packed with longtime residents and people who are new to Crown Heights and want to get to know their neighbors; City Council Member Letitia James, Crow Hill Community Association founder Eve Porter, and people who are not yet old enough to vote but who are already actively engaged in community organizing; plus good food, good music, and many good stories: how amazing to meet the people responsible for planting gorgeous trees that look like they have been on the block forever!

The exhibit Listen to This is on view at LaunchPad until the end of June – don’ t miss it.